Author Website
Jaime Pasquier
Author Philosopher Historian
Family, History, and Virtue
My books grow out of a family tradition that stretches across continents and generations. The Scandal That Shook the Throne explores the mystery of my Pasquier heritage—the unanswered questions about exile, survival, and where our family truly began. The Virtuous Life: Ancient Wisdom for Modern Living reflects the intellectual and moral inheritance I received from my father, rooted in education, reflection, and ancient ethical thought. Together, the two books trace a single story: one of origins and one of character, showing how history and values shape the way we live.
The Journey Toward Human Flourishing
Across history, individuals and empires have risen or fallen not because of what they possessed, but because of the character they cultivated. My writing—whether philosophical or historical—follows that thread through time, asking what it means to live well in an age of abundance and uncertainty. That exploration continues with my latest book.

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A Story of What We've Lost — and How to Reclaim It
For thousands of years, thinkers across every major civilization arrived at the same core insight: human flourishing comes not from what we have, but from who we become. The Greeks called it aretê — excellence of character. The Stoics built practical systems for inner freedom regardless of circumstance. Buddhist, Confucian, and Christian traditions each charted rigorous paths toward the same destination. And the architects of the modern world — from Socrates to Borlaug, from Aristotle to Wollstonecraft — built their lasting contributions not through brilliance alone, but through character: intellectual courage, persistence, and a commitment to human welfare over personal comfort.
Today, artificial intelligence, biotechnology, and global connectivity are combining to create possibilities no previous generation could have imagined — and the quality of the coming age will be determined not by the sophistication of our machines, but by the character of the people who build and govern them. This book is written for the professionally successful person who feels privately empty, and for anyone who suspects that the relentless pursuit of more is not the same as the pursuit of better.
What the Book Explores

The Paradox of Progress
Why do rising rates of anxiety, loneliness, and emptiness accompany our greatest material achievements? Ancient thinkers predicted this — and charted a way through.
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The Cardinal Virtues
Wisdom, courage, justice, and temperance — the four foundations of excellent character, explored not as abstract ideals but as living, practical skills.
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Wisdom Across Traditions
Stoicism, Buddhism, Confucianism, and Christianity share a startling convergence: human flourishing demands the deliberate cultivation of character.
The Pattern of Civilizations
Every great civilization followed the same arc. We are the first with the complete historical record of how and why they fell — and the chance to choose differently.
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The Age of Abundance
As AI, biotechnology, and renewable energy reshape the human condition, the ancient question returns with new urgency: What kind of people will wield these tools?
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The Architects of Progress
From Socrates to Borlaug, the thinkers who built civilization were not merely brilliant — they embodied the virtues they taught.
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From the Pages
“Technology alone will not get us there. Every powerful tool is an amplifier — it magnifies whatever character guides its use. The same AI that can cure disease can be weaponized for control. The same connectivity that enables collaboration can spread disinformation. The quality of the coming age will be determined not by the sophistication of our machines but by the character of the people who build and govern them.”
Introduction · The Virtuous Life
Why I Wrote This Book
This book was written with a sense of urgency — not the urgency of a crisis that has already arrived, but the urgency of a pattern that has repeated itself across four thousand years of recorded history.
The historian Sir John Glubb spent a lifetime studying the lifecycle of empires — Assyria, Persia, Greece, Rome, the Arab Empire, Ottoman Turkey, Spain, and Britain. Despite vast differences in geography, religion, technology, and culture, he found that every one of them followed the same arc: pioneering energy, then conquest, then commerce, then affluence, then intellect, and finally decadence and collapse. The average lifespan? Roughly 250 years.
I look at this country today and I see every one of these symptoms. But I also see something that none of those fallen civilizations possessed: the complete historical record of how and why they fell. We are the first civilization in history with access to the full archive of human success and failure.
The choice is not between progress and tradition. It is between progress with character and progress without it. That is the reason for this book — and the reason it matters now.
__Jaime Pasquier
Also by Jaime Pasquier
The Scandal That Schook the Throne
Historical Novel Inspired by the Praslin Affair
A murder that shook a kingdom. A confession that rewrites history.
A historical fiction novel rooted in the infamous Praslin Affair — the 1847 murder that accelerated the collapse of the French monarchy. While Rachel Field's All This and Heaven Too told the story through the eyes of the governess, this novel turns the lens toward the one figure history tried to silence: the murderer himself.
Drawing from French archival records and Nicaraguan family oral tradition, the novel explores a provocative premise: that the Duke escaped France, lived under an assumed name in Nicaragua, and carried the weight of his crime for another 35 years. This is not just a retelling — it is a reckoning.
The Novel Examines:
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Power and its corruptions
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Obsession and its consequences
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The thin line between guilt, remorse, and self-preservation
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How the powerful evade justice while the innocent pay the price
Valoraciones y Comentarios
Basada en el infame asesinato que ayudó a derrocar a la monarquía francesa, esta novela sigue una premisa ficticia arraigada en la tradición oral familiar: que Charles de Choiseul-Praslin escapó a Nicaragua, donde vivió otros 35 años bajo un nombre falso.
Revela la violencia oculta tras fachadas respetables y cómo los escándalos pueden derribar sistemas sociales enteros y remodelar la literatura.
Revela cómo los poderosos eluden la justicia mientras los inocentes sufren—una verdad atemporal envuelta en una conmovedora tragedia histórica.


Acerca de Jaime Pasquier
Jaime Pasquier se especializa en ficción histórica bilingüe y misterios genealógicos, combinando la historia documentada con la tradición oral familiar para crear narrativas cautivadoras que unen el pasado y el presente.
